Both cloths, works of such meaning and beauty, I see this image of your grandsons, wrapping themselves in Remember 2016, placing it over chairs or as you have done outside, a fort to hold memory, fun and love. Now here comes an image of Logan, wrapping the quilt around her, after she has engaged in the antics of the fort play, she rises as the leader of the gang...so many stories here, and that is such a gift.

The light shining through Land of Drought and Flood is exquisite. I love both assemblages and am looking forward to seeing how they settle into your life. Thanks for including us all in this year-long ode.

wow! beautiful pieces however made, but esp. moving, somehow for being diaries and offering the example of how daily effort adds up to something substantial and beautiful. I really love how the rows of black and white unify the large piece.

Artist websites

The Peace Pin Project

Click the peace pin picture to learn how the project began. To see more images of the original pins, which were sent to more than 70 individuals in half a dozen countries and 19 states in the US, scroll down to the INDEX and click on the PEACE PIN PROJECT link.

Mo's Project: "I dream of a world where love is the answer"

A collaborative effort in which creative souls around the world are making talismans to be stitched onto the branches of a dreaming tree. Just click the picture to see Mo's blog posts that will ultimately lead to her "Braille of the Soul" show at Artsite in March 2019. My contribution to the project can be tracked by going to the INDEX (below) and clicking on the link "I dream of a world where love is the answer."

Blanco River Monument Project

To learn more about the project go to http://www.blancorivermonument.com/ ... to read more on this blog, click the image.

The Hearts for Charleston Quilt Project

Click on the heart image (above) to see posts about the Hearts for Charleston project on Dee Mallon's blog. To see posts on this blog, click the Hearts for Charleston link in the INDEX.

It's a long way from Williamsburg, Virginia to the Texas Hill Country, but I've never looked back. Instead, my days are full of stitching, natural dyeing, assemblage art appreciation, grandparenting, cactus whacking, Americana music and Tex-Mex cooking ... not to mention wildflowers and critters.
As local bard Robert Earl Keen says, "The road goes on forever & the party never ends."